
Maryon Mews is a street in Hampstead.
Hampstead Heath Hampstead Heath railway station has been part of the London Overground since 11 November 2007. Keats House Keats House is a writer’s house museum in a house once occupied by the Romantic poet John Keats. Rosslyn Hill Unitarian Chapel The Rosslyn Hill Unitarian Chapel is a place of worship and a member of the General Assembly of Unitarian and Free Christian Churches, the umbrella organisation for British Unitarians. Rosslyn House Rosslyn (Roslyn) House, which stood between Wedderburn and Lyndhurst Roads, was one of the last of the famous old Hampstead houses to be destroyed. South End Green South End Green is the focus of a distinct Hampstead community. St Stephen’s Church St. Stephen’s is a former church building, sited on Rosslyn Hill at its junction with Pond Street, a steep slope adjacent to the Royal Free Hospital. Constantine Road, NW3 Constantine Road was planned as a direct route from Gospel Oak and Kentish Town to South End Green and the heath. Cressy Road, NW3 Cressy Road was named for a famous English victory by its builder Thomas Gibb. Rosslyn Hill, NW3 Rosslyn Hill is a road connecting the south end of Hampstead High Street to the north end of Haverstock Hill.
South End Green is the focus of a distinct Hampstead community.South End Green has been marked as such on maps since the 18th century, going simultaneously by another name -
Pond Street.
The area took more shape along the rough edges of Hampstead Heath in 1835, when the small puddle at the bottom of aptly-named
Pond Street was filled in. Much like Parliament Hill on the opposite side of the Heath, the arrival of a tram terminus brought people, shops, roads, homes and large public houses to this once sleepy hamlet by mid-century.